ec2

0.1.1 • Public • Published

Node EC2 Build Status

Evented Node.js bindings to the EC2 Query API.

  • Node EC2 is a minimal Node.js API with a pinch of sugar.
  • Node EC2 creates a signed request from a AWS EC command name a plain old JavaScript object of command parameters.
  • Node EC2 parses the XML response and converts it into JSON.
  • Node EC2 does not define control flow, so use your favorite control flow library.
  • Node EC2 lets Amazon AWS do all the error checking in one place, then returns the errors as an Error to a Node.js style callback.

Because Node EC2 is such a thin layer over the Amazon AWS EC2 API you can use the Amazon API Reference to find your way around. Node EC2 calls translate directly to Amazon Query API.

Synopsis

An example using RunInstances to launch a 32-bit Fedora 17 instance in Virginia.

Our program reads the AWS secrets from a file named "~/.aws" that contains the key and secret as JSON.

{ "key": "EXAMPLE"
, "secret": "EXAMPLE"
}

Our program launches and instance, then calls "DescribeInstances" until it is ready to use. When it's read it prints the TK host name for use with ssh.

// Require EC2.
var ec2 = require("ec2")
  , fs = require("fs")
  , path = require("path")
  , configuration = path.resolve(process.env.HOME, ".aws")
  ;
 
// Read in the configuration above.
var configuration = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync(configuration, "utf8"));
 
// Create an ec2 function that uses your configuration.
ec2 = ec2(configuration)
 
// Run an instance and wait for it to become ready.
ec2("RunInstances", {
  ImageId: "ami-2d4aa444", KeyName: "launch_key", MinCount: 1, MaxCount: 1
}, running);
 
 
var reservationId, instanceId;
function running (error, response) {
  if (error) throw error;
  reservationId = response.reservationId
  instanceId = response.instancesSet[0].instanceId;
  describe();
}
 
function describe () {
  ec2("DescribeInstances", {}, starting);
}
 
function starting (error, response) {
  if (error) throw error;
  var reservation, instance;
  reservation = response.reservationSet.filter(function (reservation) {
    return reservation.reservationId == reservationId;
  })[0];
  instance = reservation.instancesSet.filter(function (instance) {
    return instance.instanceId == instanceId;
  })[0];
  if (instance.instanceState.name == "running") ready();
  else setTimeout(describe, 2500);
}
 
function ready () {
  console.log("Instance created with id: " + instanceId);
}

I'm afraid you'll find that working with Amazon AWS is a bit wordy. The XML documents seem to gravitate toward the longest possible element name that could possibly describe the property

Installing

The easiest way to install is using npm.

npm install ec2

You can also checkout the source code for using git. It has only one dependency, the wonderful little XML parser node-xml.

Initialization

Node EC2 exports a function you can use to build an EC2 function. You can call it directly from require("ec2") to build an ec2 function configured for your application.

var ec2 = require("ec2")({ key: "<REDACTED>", secret: "<REDACTED>" });
 
ec2("DescribeInstances", {}, function (error, result) {
  if (error) throw error;
  console.log(result)
});

Options to the ec2 function are:

  • key — Your Amazon AWS key.
  • secret — Your Amazon AWS secret key, which you should always keep secret.
  • endpoint — Either the region identifier or else the fully qualified domain name of the AWS server.

The region identifiers are one of the following.

  • us-west-2 — Oregon.
  • us-west-1 — California.
  • us-east-1 — Virginia.
  • sa-east-1 — Sao Paluo.
  • ap-northeast-1 — Tokyo.
  • ap-southeast-1 — Singapore.
  • eu-west-1 — Ireland.

If you do not specify endpoint when you construct your ec2 function, you can specify it later when you construct your ec2 function.

Invocation

Invoke Node EC2 by passing a command name, command parameters in an object, and a callback.

var ec2 = require("ec2")({ key: "<REDACTED>"
                         , secret: "<REDACTED>"
                         , endpoint: "us-east-1"
                         })
  , parameters;
 
parameters =
{ ImageId: "ami-2d4aa444"
, KeyName: "launch_key"
, MinCount: 1
, MaxCount: 1
};
 
ec2("RunInstances", parameters, function (error, result) {
  if (error) throw error;
  console.log(result)
});

You can override configuration details by passing an options object as the first argument to the Node EC2 function.

var ec2 = require("ec2")({ key: "<REDACTED>"
                         , secret: "<REDACTED>"
                         , endpoint: "us-east-1"
                         })
  , parameters;
 
parameters =
{ ImageId: "ami-e269e5d2"
, KeyName: "launch_key"
, MinCount: 1
, MaxCount: 1
};
 
ec2({ endpoint: "us-west-2" }, "RunInstances", parameters, function (error, result) {
  if (error) throw error;
  console.log(result)
});

You can also create a new Node EC2 function that extends configuration of an Node EC2 function. You can use this to create a base function that holds your credentials, and specific functions for the specific regions.

var ec2 = require("ec2")({ key: "<REDACTED>" , secret: "<REDACTED>" })
  , ec2east = ec2({ endpoint: "us-east-1" })
  , ec2west = ec2({ endpoint: "us-west-2" })
  , parameters
  ;
 
parameters =
{ ImageId: "ami-e269e5d2"
, KeyName: "launch_key"
, MinCount: 1
, MaxCount: 1
};
 
ec2east("RunInstances", parameters, function (error, eastern) {
  if (error) throw error;
  parameters.ImageId = "ami-e269e5d2";
  ec2west("RunInstances", parameters, function (error, western) {
    if (error) throw error;
    console.log(eastern, western);
  });
});

Why So Simple?

Another implementation might set out to define a library of functions, one for each function provided by the AWS EC2 API. This way, you could validate the command name and parameters before you call.

We believe that if there's something wrong with your request, you'll find out soon enough. The Amazon AWS server that handles your request will do a bang up job of error checking, and it will be able to do all the error checking in one place.

On the client side, we could validate parameter names, but on the AWS site validation goes beyond semantics to authorization, service availability, etc.

If the Amazon AWS EC2 API adds a dozen new features overnight, you don't have to wait for a new version of Node EC2 to use them.

Because of this, there is a one to one mapping between the Amazon Query API and the actions provided by Node EC2. Changes to the Amazon Query API are available immediately to Node EC2 applications.

You can learn more about node-ec2 at the node-ec2 GitHub web page and by reading the wiki.

Command Line Interface

Node EC2 also comes with a command line interface. The command line interface is very helpful if you want to examine the JSON results of an Amazon AWS EC2 API call.

The ec2 program will look for a configuration file at ~/.aws or else use the value of the AWS_CONFIG environment variable as the path to the configuration file. The configuration file is the JSON file used to create a Node EC2 function described above. It contains your key, secret key and the service endpoint.

$ ec2 DescribeKeyPairs
{
  "requestId": "1d42624e-a3c8-4dca-8d42-6ac0a11f4468",
  "keySet": [
    {
      "keyName": "automation_key",
      "keyFingerprint": "82:a4:69:ca:89:31:8f:58:75:ae:24:eb:e5:71:78:56:32:09:3a:24"
    },
    {
      "keyName": "temporary_key",
      "keyFingerprint": "c0:14:ff:06:23:dd:52:6a:4d:29:e9:0f:1f:54:13:73:e1:c8:fd:90"
    },
    {
      "keyName": "launch_key",
      "keyFingerprint": "8c:cf:71:0d:84:05:19:cd:7d:89:ca:62:7e:8f:51:0b:16:df:f4:c0"
    }
  ]
}

Invocation is first the command name, then command arguments just as they appear in the Amazon AWS API. Note that some arguments in the API require a number appended to the argument name.

$ ec2 RunInstances ImageId ami-08d97e61 KeyName launch_key MinCount 1 MaxCount 1
{
  "requestId": "7aa586a5-c658-4735-9152-72ad20cb3282",
  "reservationId": "r-de7200bb",
  "ownerId": "341264201128",
  "groupSet": [
    {
      "groupId": "sg-c8f72da7",
      "groupName": "default"
    }
  ],
  "instancesSet": [
    {
      "instanceId": "i-2af0e253",
      "imageId": "ami-08d97e61",
      "instanceState": {
        "code": "0",
        "name": "pending"
      },
      "privateDnsName": null,
      "dnsName": null,
      "reason": null,
      "keyName": "launch_key",
      "amiLaunchIndex": "0",
      "productCodes": null,
      "instanceType": "m1.small",
      "launchTime": "2012-06-28T18:29:55.000Z",
      "placement": {
        "availabilityZone": "us-east-1a",
        "groupName": null,
        "tenancy": "default"
      },
      "kernelId": "aki-407d9529",
      "monitoring": {
        "state": "disabled"
      },
      "groupSet": [
        {
          "groupId": "sg-c8f72da7",
          "groupName": "default"
        }
      ],
      "stateReason": {
        "code": "pending",
        "message": "pending"
      },
      "architecture": "i386",
      "rootDeviceType": "ebs",
      "rootDeviceName": "/dev/sda1",
      "blockDeviceMapping": null,
      "virtualizationType": "paravirtual",
      "clientToken": null,
      "hypervisor": "xen"
    }
  ]
}

Change Log

Changes for each release since 0.1.1.

Version 0.1.1 — Thu Jun 28 22:08:28 UTC 2012

  • Publish a version without junk directories that defeat NPM. #9. #23.
  • Create change log. #13.
  • Specify fully qualified hostname for endpoint. #25. #3
  • Rewrite README.md to describe one function API.
  • Delete Cakefile. #16.
  • Convert to JavaScript. #10.

Versions prior to 0.1.1 were not tracked very well in git. My fault, but I'm not feeling the guilt necessary to perform the git forensics necessary to reconstruct a change log.

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